The Scotsman

Scots still have one of poorest rates of life expectancy

- By CHRIS MCCALL

Men living in Scotland’s poorest areas can expect to die ten years before those living in more well-off places, official statistics has found.

The life expectancy gap between the 20 per cent most and least deprived areas of Scotland was 10.5 years for males and 7.8 years for females, a report by the National Records of Scotland showed.

The country still has one of the lowest life expectanci­es in western Europe for both genders, at 77.1 years for men and 81.2 years for women.

But it is the considerab­le variations between different parts of the country which will alarm health experts and antipovert­y campaigner­s.

Scottish Labour said

it exposed the “postcode lottery” many faced for healthcare.

The council areas with the highest life expectancy for women were East Renfrewshi­re and East Dunbartons­hire, where a baby girl could expect to live for 83.5 years. By contrast, in West Dunbartons­hire which had the lowest life expectancy for females, a baby girl would be expected to live for 78.8 years.

For men, life expectancy at birth was highest in Orkney, where a baby boy could expect to live until he was 80.3 years old. Glasgow had the lowest life expectancy for males of 73.4 years.

All council areas have seen an increase in life expectancy since 2004-2006. For Scotland as a whole, life expectancy has risen for males by 2.5 years and for females by 1.6 years.

“The statistics published today show that every council area of Scotland has seen an increase in life expectancy over the past decade, but there is still a lot of variation between areas,” said Registrar General for Scotland Tim Ellis. “The report shows that deprivatio­n has a strong effect on life expectancy with people who live in more deprived areas expected to live shorter lives than those in less deprived areas.”

Scottish Labour public health spokesman Colin Smyth said: “These figures expose the postcode lottery Scotland faces. The prosperity of the family you were born into has a huge impact on your life chances, quality of life and ultimately life expectancy.

“The blunt truth is that there has been an utter failure from existing government strategies to tackle health inequaliti­es. We need to see radical action to address the gap between the richest and the poorest in Scotland.

“The SNP need to realise that a government cannot tackle health inequaliti­es without tackling the wealth inequaliti­es in our society.”

It was revealed in March that life expectancy in Scotland failed to rise for the first time since records were establishe­d in 1861.

Statistics showed that in three years from 2012-2015 the ages at which women and men could expect to live remained static at 81.1 and 77.1 years respective­ly.

Experts believe the trend was partly caused by a huge spike in mortality in 2015.

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